bravo!! good job....are you cheating? or do you know these stuff on top of your tongue? If you do...then damn you are smart & i have no doubt that you will score 20+ on DAT ...goodluck guys! keep posting good questions. I am thinking of making index cards of these questions so i can memorize them 😀which layer permits gas exchange in an egg?
a allantois
b yolk sac
c chorion
d amnion
which circulatory system do anthropods use?
a closed circulatory system
b simple diffusion
c open circulatory system
d cells are in direct contact with internal & external environment.
Each hemoglobin molecule can bind to how many molecules of oxygen?
--4
oh ok sorry! i dont have any weird questions. I just put stuff that looked important to me.Yeah I answered those questions too. And lonley doesn't need to cheat...he is the Real Deal...bio machine
I think we're pretty sound on the basics...this thread is mainly for oddball stuff
& by the way i was kidding about cheating stuff! don't take it seriously!Yeah I answered those questions too. And lonley doesn't need to cheat...he is the Real Deal...bio machine
I think we're pretty sound on the basics...this thread is mainly for oddball stuff
[/QUOTE]The brown color of fecal matter is most likely attributed to:
a) bilirubin
b) bile
c) urobilinogen
d) two of the above
e) none of the above
The answer is urobilinogen. Bilirubin is a white/gray pigment that is converted urobilinogen in the small intestine. It is urobilinogen that gives the characteristic brown color of feces.
Which of the following are associated with anchoring junctions:
a) hemidesmosome
b) adherins junction
c) cadherins
d) tight junctions
e) all of the above
hemidesmosomes adherins cadherins are all associated with anchoring junctions...my mistake!! I mean to have choice D as two of the above.
Which of the following base pair substitutions will most likely result in a truncated protein:
a) missense
b) nonsense
c) silent
d) frame-shift
e) all of the above
The answer is a nonsense which will change an amino acid codon into a stop codon...missense will result in a different amino acid codon. Silent mutation is due to the redundancy of the genetic code. Frame-shift will result from insertion or deletion
The term that best describes cell signaling that targets only a few neighboring cells is best described as:
a) autocrine signaling
b) paracrine signaling
c) endocrine signaling
d) synaptic signaling
e) two of the above
Correct!!!
Hashimotos Disease is best described as:
a) anti-body mediated attack on the thyroid
b) non-specific immune attack on the thyroid
c) autoimmune disease involving a cell-mediated attack on the thyroid
d) humoral response that targets the thyroid
e) none of the above
Nice!!!
A pheremone shows the ability to accelerate reproductive maturity in an organism. Which of the following is the correct term for this particular pheremone:
a) primer pheremone
b) releaser pheremone
c) sexual pheremone
d) primal pheremone
e) none of the above
Nice!!!
Traverse tubules are absent in which of the following:
a) smooth muscle
b) skeletal muscle
c) cardiac muscle
d) two of the above
e) all of the above
Good!!!
The fructose portion of semen is produced by:
a) seminal vesicles many
b) sertoli cells
c) seminiferous tubules
d) epididymis
e) prostate gland
Bad ass!!!
Which of the following structures specifically controls the production and release of melatonin?
a) pineal gland
b) suprachiasmatic nucleus
c) midbrain
d) anterior pituitary
e) brocas area
Maybe I should've worded the questions differently...but the suprachiasmatic nucleus controls the pineal gland and therefore does control production and release of melatonin. However, the pineal gland is the location where melatonin is released. The suprachiasmatic nucleus is located in the hypothalamus.
Which of the following will shorten in a muscle contraction:
a) H-zone
b) A-band
c) Z-line
d) I-band
e) two of the above
Nice
Which of the following structures is responsible for the propagation of intracellular action potentials in the sarcomere of skeletal muscle:
a) sarcoplasmic reticulum
b) acetylcholine
c) gap junctions
d) traverse tubules
e) sarcolema
Traverse tubules...I think the action potential from acetylcholine will travel through the traverse tubules before reaching the sarcoplasmic reticulum
Which of the following a correct term to describe a type of contraction that involves the shortening of skeletal muscle:
a) eccentric isometric contraction
b) concentric isometric contraction
c) eccentric isotonic contraction
d) concentric isotonic contraction
e) none of the above
An isometric contraction does not involve the shortening or lengthening of muscles. Nonetheless the strength of the contractio increases with duration. Think of it as a static contraction. An isotonic contraction involves shortening or lengthening. Eccentric pertains to lengthening and concentric pertains to shortening.
Which of the following is an example of a semilunar valve:
a) bicuspid valve
b) tricuspid valve
c) mitral valve
d) pulmonary valve
e) two of the above
Correct
Which of the following will serve to alleviate torque during the replication of DNA?
a) topoisomerase**Not sure, what the question is asking, but topoisomerase is used to relieve super-coiling.
b) helicase
c) primase
d) ligase
e) all of the above
Correct
any1 else wants to answer rest of the questions that i posted? After all of them are answered, i will post more! 🙂
& by the way i was kidding about cheating stuff! don't take it seriously!
If fertilization occurs developing placenta produces what?
If fertilization occurs, the developing placenta produces hCG (human chorionic Gonadotrophin), which maintains corpus luteum.
what are episomes?
episomes are plasmids that are capable of integration into the bacterial genome.
I was confused about order...chorion then placenta...because the chorion first produces hCG...at three months the corpus luteum is no longer needed and the endometrium is maintained by the placenta which will produce estrogen and progesterone.
So...what is the chorion derived from? What is the analagous term for the blastodisc in a mammalian blastocyst? What type of cleavage is exhibited by an egg with plentiful yolk?
Thanks...I completely forgot about episomes...now I know. Good stuff
I was confused about order...chorion then placenta...because the chorion first produces hCG...at three months the corpus luteum is no longer needed and the endometrium is maintained by the placenta which will produce estrogen and progesterone.
So...what is the chorion derived from?
chorion derives from embryo itself.
What is the analagous term for the blastodisc in a mammalian blastocyst?
???
What type of cleavage is exhibited by an egg with plentiful yolk?
yolk sac....i am not sure if i understand your question here....
Thanks...I completely forgot about episomes...now I know. Good stuff
Round III
Which of the following best describes the cause of Graves Disease:
a) The TSH receptor is deceived by an antibody mimicing the effects of TSH and the result is an increase in thyroid hormone**Not sure**
b) The TSH receptor is deceived by an antibody mimicing the effects of TSH and the result is a decrease in thyroid hormone
c) It involves a defect in the anterior pituitary therefore resulting in an increase in TSH
d) It involves a defect in the hypothalamus therefore causing a decrease in TSH
e) none of the above
Which of the following cells are capable of histamine production:
a) basophils
b) mast cells
c) eosinophils
d) lymphocytes
e) two of the above
Which of the following can stop transcription:
a) poly A tail
b) 5' Guanosine cap
c) GC hairpin
d) two of the above
e) none of the above
A tumor suppressor is best represented by:
a) cyclin
b) mitosis promoting factor
c) a growth factor receptor
d) an unregulated defective kinase protein
e) two of the above
Which of the following assays would most likely give clues about cell differentiation among a sample of human cells obtained from different organs:
a) southern blot
b) gene trap
c) western blot
d) northern blot
e) all of the above
Successful transfection can be achieved through the use of:
a) calcium phosphate
b) electroporation
c) lipofection
d) gene gun
e) all of the above
Rearrangement of DNA sequences in specific cells would most likely be seen in:
a) antibody production**Not sure**
b) antigen production
c) microtubule production
d) myoglobin production
e) production of MHC complex
Which of the following exhibit coenocytic forms:
a) myxomycota
b) zygomycota
c) acrasiomycota
d) two of the above
e) all of the above
The endosperm is absorbed by the cotelydon in:
a) dicots
b) monocots
c) gymnosperms
d) ferns
e) none of the above
Which of the following statements best describes the purpose of the figure eight waggle dance done by bees:
a) it gives the location of a predator
b) it is done to ward off predators
c) it gives the location of food
d) it is a mating ritual
e) none of the above
Which immunoglobulin is most abundant:
a) IgG
b) IgA
c) IgD
d) IgM
e) all of the above are equally abundant
The first immunoglobulin involved in the humoral response is:
a) IgG
b) IgA
c) IgM
d) IgD
e) IgE
Which of the following is released during ovulation:
a) ovum
b) primary oocyte
c) oogonium
d) secondary oocyte
e) ovule
Which of the following are seedless vascular plants:
a) mosses**Only if you mean club mossses**
b) gymnosperms
c) ferns
d) angiosperms
e) two of the above
If one were to examine a portion of the pancrease that exhibits exocrine functions, which type of simple epithelium would one most likely observe:
a) simple squamous
b) simple columnar
c) stratified columnar
d) pseudostratified
e) none of the above
The attachment of a tendon to a bone that does move is defined as:
a) origin
b) periodontal ligament
c) synovial joint
d) amphiarthrotic joint
e) insertion
Hope these are right, and I am sorry I dont know all of them, but these are really challenging and its a good practice, most of them require you to think outside the box and apply prior class knowledge!
VERY GOOD JOB poc91!!!
Round III
The first immunoglobulin involved in the humoral response is:
a) IgG
b) IgA
c) IgM
d) IgD
e) IgE
I was under the impression it was IgM...I'll have to revisit this later. IgD is usually found on top of Bcells and I think they promote antibody production
Which of the following is released during ovulation:
a) ovum
b) primary oocyte
c) oogonium
d) secondary oocyte
e) ovule
ahh..tricky...the secondary oocyte is released during ovulation. The secondary oocyte is the product of Meiosis I...Meiosis II will not occur until fertilization
Most of the biochem stuff is from my old biochem notes....
Does anyone have any experimental bio question from their old texts or something. I am trying to come up with some but its hard to come up with those. If anyone has some, would you mind posting some of those, Thanks!!
Sorry, D.Acrasiomycotat and Myxomycota are not the same thing. Oops, my bad.
1. I picked IgD since they have to do with antibodies and antibodies are responsible for humural response.
2. From what I've studied I always thought ovum was released and the rupture follicle became corpus leutum. Can you double check this!!
It's true lonely, I just checked my physiology book! I was confused about that awhile back too, and when I read it in the book, I was surprised.
We know that the primary oocyte is arrested in prophase I of meiosis I...however, the secondary oocyte (product of meiosis I) is arrested in metaphase II!!! It is indeed the union of sperm and secondary oocyte that allows the completion of meiosis II. After meiosis II is complete then nucleic fusion occurs to give a diploid zygote!
Since you guys seem to know your stuff, thought to ask you all for help! Sorry i know this thread is for posting challenging bio questions, but I am having difficulty understanding Q 50 of destroyer bio section. I am sure it might be pretty basic stuff for you guys, but not for me.
Q 50 - Which statement is false?
a) The dark reaction of photosynthesis can occur if there is light
b) NADPH is needed in the dark reaction of photosynthesis.
c) During the dark reaction CO2 becomes attached to ribulose, which then breaks down to yield 2 moles of PGAL
d) During the light reaction of photosynthesis, a low concentration of hydrogen ions are produced within the thylakoids
e) SIx turns of the calvin Cycle are required to produce one glucose molecule
correct answer: d
I think: d & e - both are false
I know for sure that a,b & c are true. I understand why d is false. But i do not understand why e is true? I read Schuam's outlines of bio & my bio textbook (CAmpbell 6th edition) & nowhere does it say that it requires 6 calvin cycle to produce 1 glucose molecule. Campbell says - For the net synthesis of one molecule of this sugar, the cycle must take place 3 times, fixing 3 molecules of CO2. (pg 189) For the net synthesis of one G3P molecule, the Calvin cycle consumes a total of 9 molecules of ATP & 6 molecules of NADPH. (pg 191) It doesnt mention that it takes 6 cycles to produce 1 glucose molecule or may be I am not able to read between lines. I have always had trouble understanding both stages of photosynthesis.
I would really appreciate any help! Thanks in advance!
hey thanks...that makes sense! i wonder why campbell says 3 turns! i called Dr. Romano as well...he is sending me a link that will give better explaination.Okay the best way to think about this is to see how many carbons are present in glucose (C6H12O6). Since 6 carbons are present, and CO2 only has one carbon. Therefore 6 CO2 will be required to produce the one molecule of glucose.
Things to know about these:
You need 18 ATP and 12 NADPH (these 2 things come from light rxn), and 6 CO2 to complete six turn of calvin cycle and produce 1 glucose, 10 PGAL (ussually 12 but 2 are used up to make glucose). The remaining PGAL are recycled to make RUBP again so they could be used up again!
*Hope this helps!
Hi!
In order to answer this problem, make sure that your clear with what insulin and glucagon does. Then eliminate wrong answers since the correct answer might not be obvious in this particular problem. Since you identified that hepatocytes are in fact liver cells, you can easily eliminate choice (a) just knowing that (glut4) is only present adipose and muscle cells.
[/QUOTE]Traverse tubules are absent in which of the following:
a) smooth muscle
b) skeletal muscle
c) cardiac muscle
d) two of the above
e) all of the above
Don't cardiac muscles also lack transverse tubules. They also use gap junctions, correct?
Gonna review some more then read through this thread and see if I can keep up/follow along cuz right now I found it a bit overwhelming 😳bump for a great questions thread!
also, for those of you guys who did take it already (like poc 🙂 ) did you see this type of difficulty on the real thing? Some of these questions are out there, at least for me, tells me I have a lot more memorizing and understanding to do in bioGonna review some more then read through this thread and see if I can keep up/follow along cuz right now I found it a bit overwhelming 😳
thanks for the great questions though you guys!😀
Cool...someone bumped this thread!!! I was posting questions on this thread days before my DAT.
Making up your own questions (especially for bio) was really good practice. An excellent way of bringing together everything you know...
keep this thread going w/ more multiple choice questions.
A pheremone shows the ability to accelerate reproductive maturity in an organism. Which of the following is the correct term for this particular pheremone:
a) primer pheremone
b) releaser pheremone
c) sexual pheremone
d) primal pheremone
e) none of the above
Nice!!!
Wouldnt the answer be primer pherome b/c primer pheromes bring about long-term change in recipient while a releaser pherome brings about a reversible change?
Hey poc,
Yea I remember those days!! I know I was freaking out that time! Anyways, I am going to take it one more time in two weeks, hopefully get good score in RC!!